Anti-Glacier Prayer "Worked Too Well"—Vatican Approves New Ritual

Pilgrims from the Swiss villages of Fiesch and Fieschertal pray for glacier growth late last month.

Photograph by Maxime Schmid, European Pressphoto Agency

About 50 people set out on foot from the Swiss village of Fiesch at dawn on July 31. As the sun rose over 13,000-foot (4,000-meter) Alpine peaks, the procession moved slowly up a mountainside and into the cool of a pine forest, stopping at a tiny church.

By 7:30 the group had swollen to around a hundred—too many to fit inside the chapel of Maria Heimsuchung, or Mary of the Visitation, so a makeshift altar was erected outside.

"Glacier is ice, ice is water, water is life," intoned priest Toni Wenger, before beseeching God to stop the glaciers high above them from melting.

By changing a few, crucial words in the liturgy, Father Wenger reversed a Catholic ritual that for 350 years had implored the heavens to push back the glaciers.

The Vatican had approved the change as the effects of global warming became all too tangible in the Alps.

Climate change's effects are accentuated in mountainous regions, and in the 20th century temperatures in Alpine Switzerland increased by twice the global average. Today Swiss glaciers are shrinking by nearly 33 feet (10 meters) a year, on average. What's more, alpine communities are reporting more rain and stronger winds than in centuries past.

Looming over the villages, the two largest glaciers in the Alps—the Aletsch (satellite picture) and Fiescher (satellite picture)—grew over the next two centuries, reaching their maximum lengths around 1850. Around that time, the Aletsch stretched some 16 miles (26 kilometers); the Fiescher was larger by similar proportions, though exact measurements aren't available for the smaller glacier.

The consequences for the villagers were dire.

When pieces of the Aletsch fell into Lake Märjelen—which lies between the two glaciers—the lake overflowed. Three hundred and fifty-three million cubic feet (10 million cubic metres) of water rushed down the valley below, inundating settlements, damaging property, and killing villagers. Extremely poor until the late 19th century, the locals had few options but to rebuild.

Having endured hundreds such diasters, the villagers—with the help of local Jesuits—organized the pilgrimage, to be held annually on July 31: the Catholic feast day dedicated to the Jesuits' founder, St. Ignatius of Loyola.

"We prayed for the ice to recede, and our prayer worked—too well," said Herbert Volken, mountain guide and mayor of Conches, the district that includes Fiesch.

In 2009 the local parish council petitioned the Vatican to allow a change in the wording of the prayer. A year later the Holy See agreed, and Volken hopes the new prayer will work as well as the last one.

Today the villagers no longer worry about floods, he said, but about having less drinking water, energy, and food for their animals, and more forest fires. Another problem is the impact the dwindling glaciers could have on tourism—the main source of income, besides hydropower, for the district—which is already strained by recession and the Eurozone crisis.

So far, icemelt doesn't appear to be a factor in the tourism dropoff, Volken said. But "if the [Aletsch] glacier isn't there any more, the tourists won't come."

Not far from Fiesch, the Giesen glacier has developed a gigantic crack and is at risk of collapsing and inundating villages below. In Zermatt—where a shifting glacier defines an international border—the Swiss and Italian governments are in the process of renegotiating their frontier.

The impact of the changing climate will eventually be felt wider still. The Aletsch and Fiescher glaciers—along with many other, smaller ones—feed the Rhône river system, one of Europe's most important.

Whatever the revised prayer's effects, they're unlikely to be immediate.

Holzhäuser is confident, based on past trends, that the rapid warming—and subsequent melting—will continue for at least the next 30 years. And the consequences may not be entirely obvious.

Earlier this summer, a British couple walking on Aletsch Glacier discovered human remains. The bones, which have been sent to the University of Bern for DNA analysis, are thought to have belonged to local men who disappeared in 1926, probably by falling into a crevasse that then closed above them.

According to Renato Julier, Fiesch's head of tourism, other walkers have gone missing in the region since then. "We expect more gruesome discoveries in the future," Julier said.

If attempts to combat global warming work—or, depending on your beliefs, if God is listening to the people of Fiesch—those missing walkers may remain missing. Arguably, it would be a small price to pay for ensuring the water supply for much of Europe for centuries to come.